Christian,
Do you drink wine?
I have had a few glasses along the way. But that doesn't make me an expert on wine. In fact it's entirely possible that I would love a certain vintage that a wine expert (someone who has spent their whole life learning about wine) would not like at all. That's fine for him and fine with me.
How could I take issue with him if he criticizes something that I'm extremely fond of? He knows what he's talking about. (In fact I wouldn't know if he didn't know what he was talking about because I am not an expert.) All I would know is my personal taste (uninformed as it is.)
I can promise you I wouldn't lose any sleep over it and go right on drinking the wine I like and recommending it to other's even. I also would not be troubled if he went to a wine forum complaining about the quality of wine declining steadily into cheapness and sighting the brand I drink as a prime example.
The philosophical question is: is it noble of him to do this? If he so appreciates good wine and is familiar with it's history and wants the whole world to know "the best wine" and not become too accustomed to cheap wine. Is this a good or bad thing?
I rest my case... now for a good bottle of Ripple.
DC
Do you drink wine?
I have had a few glasses along the way. But that doesn't make me an expert on wine. In fact it's entirely possible that I would love a certain vintage that a wine expert (someone who has spent their whole life learning about wine) would not like at all. That's fine for him and fine with me.
How could I take issue with him if he criticizes something that I'm extremely fond of? He knows what he's talking about. (In fact I wouldn't know if he didn't know what he was talking about because I am not an expert.) All I would know is my personal taste (uninformed as it is.)
I can promise you I wouldn't lose any sleep over it and go right on drinking the wine I like and recommending it to other's even. I also would not be troubled if he went to a wine forum complaining about the quality of wine declining steadily into cheapness and sighting the brand I drink as a prime example.
The philosophical question is: is it noble of him to do this? If he so appreciates good wine and is familiar with it's history and wants the whole world to know "the best wine" and not become too accustomed to cheap wine. Is this a good or bad thing?
I rest my case... now for a good bottle of Ripple.
DC